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Psychopathy and Externalizing Syndromes: Conceptualization, Mechanisms, and Perspectives on Treatment Chris Patrick Department of Psychology University of Minnesota Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Cleckley (1976) • described psychopathy as a paradoxical condition in which severe behavioral pathology and positive adjustment seemed to go hand in hand: I find it necessary…to postulate that the psychopath has a genuine and very serious disability, disorder, defect, or deviation…[but] a different kind of abnormality from all those now recognized as seriously impairing competency…The first and most striking difference is this: In all the orthodox psychoses…,there is a more or less obvious alteration of reasoning processes or of some other demonstrable personality feature. In the psychopath, this is not seen. The observer is confronted with a convincing mask of sanity. (p. 368) Cleckley (cont’d) The surface of the psychopath…shows up as equal to or better than normal and gives no hint at all of a disorder within. Nothing about him suggests oddness, inadequacy, or moral frailty. His mask is that of robust mental health. Yet he has a disorder that often manifests itself in conduct far more seriously abnormal than that of the schizophrenic. (p. 383) The psychopath, however perfectly he mimics man theoretically, that is to say, when he speaks for himself in words, fails altogether when he is put into the practice of actual living. His failure is so complete and so dramatic that it is difficult to see how such a failure could be achieved by anyone less defective than a downright madman... (p. 370) Clinical features of psychopathy identified by Cleckley: • overt adjustment: social charm & good intelligence; absence of delusions or irrationality; absence of anxiety or depressive symptoms; non-suicidal • chronic behavioral deviance: impulsive antisocial action; failure to learn from experience; irresponsibility; promiscuity; absence of any life plan • emotional-interpersonal deficits: lack of remorse; poverty of affect; incapacity for love; absence of loyalty; untruthfulness What accounts for this paradoxical syndrome? Traditional perspective: Behavioral deviance and emotional-interpersonal features arise from a common underlying impairment in emotion and/or cognition. [“Unitary process model”] Alternative perspective: Psychopathy as Cleckley described it reflects the confluence of two distinct processes, one related in part to adjustment, and the other related more purely to pathology. [“Dual process model”] Empirical evidence… The Psychopathy Checklist - Revised (PCL-R; Hare, 1991, 2003) Factor 1 Emotional-Interpersonal • charm, grandiosity • lying, manipulation Factor 2 Behavioral Deviance • child behavior problems • remorse • juvenile delinquency • emotional depth • boredom, impulsivity • empathy • irresponsibility • violent behavior PCL-R Psychopathy Factor 1: Emotional Interpersonal Factor 2: Behavioral Deviance r = .5 Note: Alternative 3- and 4-factor models have recently been proposed. PCL-R Factors: Differential Correlates Emot-Interpersonal Behavioral Deviance Factor Factor Emotion: low fear reactivity Emotion: normal fear reactivity Personality: hi dom- Personality: hi impulinance, low neg affect sivity, hi aggression Behavior: instrumental aggression Behavior: - reactive agg, suicide - DSM APD, alcohol & drug abuse Dual Process Model of Psychopathy: The “classic” psychopath reflects the cooccurrence of 2 distinct etiologic processes: 1) Trait fearlessness - reduced sensitivity to aversive cues. - associated with narcissism, thrill-seeking; but confers immunity to Internalizing problems. 2) Externalizing vulnerability - broad, underlying propensity toward impulse control problems (“disinhibitory psychopathology”). The Structure of Common Mental Disorders (Krueger, 1999) Major Depressive Disorder .82 Dysthymia .81 .81 N = 8,098 o &o + (community) Anxious-Misery .93 Generalized Anxiety DO Social Phobia .72 Simple Phobia .77 .76 .74 Agoraphobia INTERNALIZING .78 Fear Panic Disorder .51 Alcohol Dependence .79 Drug Dependence .84 .74 Antisocial Personality DO EXTERNALIZING Parallel in the developmental literature: Internalizing and externalizing dimensions of child psychopathology (Achenbach & Edelbroch, 1984) Cortical Reactivity Dual Process Model of Psychopathy: Psychopathy Trait Fear Blink Startle Parallel in the developmental literature: Fearful temperament and effortful control as independent constructs relevant to conscience formation in childhood (Kochanska, 1997, 2002; see also Rothbart & Ahadi, 1994) Individuals extreme in only one or the other of these dispositions (externalizing, fearlessness) will show psychopathic tendencies, but would not be “true” psychopaths according to Cleckley’s definition… Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Externalizing Spectrum Model: Key Ideas A broad vulnerability factor or dimension (“Externalizing”) underlies the spectrum of disorders that involve deficient impulse control. General proneness to developing disorders within this spectrum reflects one’s position along this vulnerability continuum, which is determined mainly by genetic influences. The specific expression of this underlying vulnerability (e.g., as APD vs. drug dependence) is determined substantially by environmental influences. The Externalizing Dimension: [single or less severe disorders] [normative traits] Low [multiple or more severe disorders] High …single continuum encompassing disinhibitory personality & impulse disorder symptoms. Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications 4. Future Directions Biometric (Twin) Analysis of the Externalizing Factor (Krueger, Hicks, Patrick et al., J Abnormal Psych, 2002) A C .58* A C .62* .25 E .71* Conduct Disorder Adult Antisocial Behavior 0 .43* Externalizing .78* 0 0 .90* N = 1,252 o &o + (MTFS Mz & Dz twin pairs) E A .51* C .63* Alcohol Dependence .58* .36 E A .20 C Drug Dependence .57* .36 E -.47* A .30 C MPQConstraint .63* .61* E A 0 C .64* E Implications Etiology of the general vulnerability (externalizing) is mostly genetic – the vulnerability, not its specific manifestation, is heritable – externalizing vulnerability factor represents a crucial target for biobehavioral research Environment is also very important – main determinant of distinct manifestations = nonshared environment – however: – shared environment contributes to CD – Kendler et al. (2003): evidence of specific genes for alc/drug Disinhibitory personality style is also an indicator of externalizing – spectrum transcends traditional “normal-abnormal” distinction What Genes Underlie General Externalizing Vulnerability? • Dick et al. (Arch Gen Psychiatry, in press): Linkage analyses using Externalizing component scores yielded evidence of a predisposing role for CHRM2— a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor gene previously linked to alcohol dependence. • Dick et al. (Curr Dir Psy Sci, in press): reviewed evidence that GABRA2, a GABA-A receptor gene on chromosome 4, is also involved—shows associations with multiple externalizing disorders. Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Modeling the Externalizing Spectrum (Krueger, Markon, Patrick et al., J Abnormal Psych, 2007) • used item response theory (IRT) and confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) to model the scope and structure of traits & behaviors reflecting poor impulse control • developed self-report scales to index a wide array of target constructs distilled from DSM disorder criteria & other relevant content domains in the literature • candidate items and scales were refined across 3 iterative rounds of data collection and analysis - overall N = 1,787 (~50:50 male/female; ~50:50 prisoners/ students) Incarcerated Populations: - high base rates of: antisocial behavior, alcohol dependence, drug dependence (often severe & co-occurring). Implication: High externalizing individuals are prevalent in prison settings. - inclusion of offenders & college students provides for sampling/modeling of the full EXT continuum. Procedure • Began each wave with mid-level targeted domains – e.g., aggression, impulsivity, drug use & problems • Identified unidimensional subfactors within each domain – Exploratory Factor and Cluster Models • Used Item Response Theory (IRT) modeling to identify desirable items for each subfactor – Desirable items are discriminating and, as a set, provide good information across a wide range of a dimension – New items were written in each wave to cover gaps in measurement – Samejima graded response model fit using MULTILOG Example: IRT information curves for Destructive Aggression scale items (e.g., “I have damaged someone’s things because it was exciting.”) Final Externalizing Inventory • 23 unidimensional scales comprising a total of 415 items – scales consist of 9 – 31 items; each indexes a specific expression (facet) of externalizing as a dimensional construct – good information coverage and corresponding reliabilities (ρs = .80-.98, where ρ is proportion of observed trait estimate variance due to latent trait variance) Externalizing Inventory Scales: Sample Items Aggression: - Relational: "I've made a fool of someone because it made me feel good." - Physical: "One or more times in my life, I have beaten someone up for bothering me." - Destructive: "I vandalized someone's house or things because they were rude to me.“ Empathy: "It doesn’t bother me to see someone else in pain." (-) Blame Externalization: “I get unfairly blamed for things.” Alienation: "People have avoided blame by taking advantage of me." Alcohol: - Use: "A little alcohol makes a good time even better." - Problems: "People have told me they're worried about my drinking too much alcohol." Marijuana: - Use: "I have rolled a marijuana joint." - Problems: "My marijuana use has led to problems at home, work, or school." Drug: - Use: "I don't like being around people who are using drugs." (-) - Problems: "At some point in my life, I couldn't get high from a drug dose that worked before." Externalizing Inventory Scales: Sample Items Impulsiveness: - Planful Control: "I think about things before I do them." - Impatient Urgency: "I have a hard time waiting patiently for things I want. " - Problematic Impulsivity: "I have lost valuable goods or money because I decided things too quickly. " Theft: "I have broken into a house, school, or other building." Fraud: "I have lied to get benefits I didn’t deserve. " Honesty: "I tell the truth whenever others are involved." Irresponsibility: "I've missed a rent or mortgage payment." Dependability: "I let others know if I’m running behind." Rebelliousness: "Many people consider me a rule breaker." Excitement Seeking: "I seek out thrills almost everywhere I go. " Boredom Proneness: "I often get bored quickly and lose interest." Externalizing Inventory: Scale Structure Exploratory Factor Analyses of these 23 scales suggested – Dominant first factor – Residual factors involving • Callous aggression • Substance problems More formal Confirmatory Factor models were fit using semi-parametric maximum-likelihood estimation – Information theoretic (“goodness of fit”) indices showed best fit for a hierarchical model… Sample Hierarchical Factor Model Note: Hierarchical model is suggested when eigenvalues from an exploratory factor analysis reveal one large dominant factor on which all variables load, along with smaller factors on which some scales also load. λ1 λ2 λ3 Irresponsibility .925 .000 -.011 Dependability -.661 -.152 .000 Problematic Impulsivity .913 .000 -.036 Impatient Urgency .726 .215 .000 Planful Control -.661 -.074 .000 Theft .872 .000 .129 Alienation .487 .012 .000 Blame Externalization .508 .238 .000 Relational Aggression .619 .676 .000 Destructive Aggression .654 .551 .000 Physical Aggression .740 .412 .000 Empathy -.482 -.554 .000 Excitement Seeking .555 .457 .000 Rebelliousness .794 .305 .000 Boredom Proneness .593 .283 .000 Honesty -.541 -.305 .000 Fraud .870 .264 .000 Marijuana Use .727 .000 .613 Marijuana Problems .751 .000 .476 Other Drug Use .790 .000 .490 Other Drug Problems .870 .000 .303 Alcohol Use .449 .000 .357 Alcohol Problems .690 .000 .237 Externalizing Scale Implications Impulse control problems and disinhibitory personality traits are indicators of a broad underlying dispositional dimension (EXT) – individuals low in EXT exhibit minimal impulse control problems – individuals high in EXT exhibit severe, co-occurring impulse control problems Broad EXT factor represents a coherent, largely genetic vulnerability to problems of this kind (Krueger, Hicks, Patrick et al., 2002) – however, other independent factors operate to shape the specific expression of this general propensity in the direction of: 1) Aggression 2) Addictive behaviors… EXTAggression vs. Addictions: Determinants? Aggression: - role of specific environmental pathogens? (e.g., early abuse; Caspi et al., 2002, Science) Addictions: - evidence for distinct genetic influences (Kendler et al., 2003, Arch Gen Psychiatry)… • e.g., proneness to dopamine system sensitization? (Robinson & Berridge , 2003, Ann Rev Psych) Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Neurobiology of the broad EXT factor Question: What is the underlying psychological and neurobiological basis of EXT (i.e., the general propensity toward impulse control problems?) Hypothesis: Impairments in cognitive-executive functioning mediated by anterior brain systems (including PFC, ACC) Evidence: Reduced event-related brain response in tasks involving on-line stimulus processing and action monitoring… EXT is associated with reduced P300 brain response n = 969 o twins Patrick, Bernat et al. (Psychophysiology, 2006) Moreover: EXT/P300 association is mediated by genes (Hicks, Bernat, Malone, Iacono, Patrick et al., Psychophysiology, 2007) Error-Related Negativity (ERN) • Anterior scalp potential that occurs following behavioral errors in a speeded performance task. • Believed to reflect the activity of an on-line response monitoring system within the brain, which operates to detect errors and prompt corrective action. • Source localization and brain imaging work indicates that anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) is the primary generator. *EXT is associated with reduced ERN response (Hall, Bernat, & Patrick, Psych Science, 2007) *EXT measure = overall EXT-100 screening Q scores Amplitude of Error-Related Negativity (ERN), by EXT group (n = 36) (n = 28) Key Follow-up Findings: • P300 reduction for EXT is pervasive across task stimuli (target, flanker, novel, feedback). • P300/EXT relation is maximal at frontal sites. • Positive slow wave ERP to novel affective stimuli is not reduced in high EXT individuals. • ERN-like response to explicit loss feedback is not reduced in high EXT individuals— although subsequent P300 response to same feedback stimulus is reduced… Loss Feedback Response by Externalizing (Bernat et al., submitted) Interpretation of ERP findings to date: • most real-life contexts: processing occurs in parallel along 2 streams—a ‘lower’ stream along which immediate stimulus features are processed, prompting actions as required; and a higher stream along which deeper elaborative processing occurs. We hypothesize that this higher stream … • involves comparing and integrating transient cognitive/affective representations with representations stored in long-term memory. • is instantiated by anterior brain regions including PFC & ACC. • is fundamental to anticipation, reflection, and self-regulation. Hypothesis for Externalizing: • lower (immediate stimulus) processing, including coding of explicit affect cues, is intact… • …but high EXT is marked by an impairment in higher elaborative processing of stimuli and events. - specifically: an impairment in a natural form of extended working memory (cf. Ericsson & Kinsch, 1995), involving representations of distal goals and consequences, that subserves adaptive behavior. Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications What other problem behaviors might represent expressions (facets) of EXT? • ADHD (conduct DO subtype) • pathological gambling • nicotine dependence • reactive (impulsive) aggression … suggested by clinical and epidemiological studies. Internalizing vs. Externalizing subtypes? EXT as a key contributor to, or moderator of, clinical presentation… • PTSD (Miller et al., Psy Assess, 2003; JAP, 2004) • suicidality (Verona, Sachs-Ericsson, & Joiner, Amer J Psychiatry, 2004) • borderline personality DO? - border of INT & EXT (vs. neurosis & psychosis) • compulsive sexual behavior? • eating disorders? Psychopathy and Externalizing: Hare’s Psychopathy Checklist-Revised Emotional-Interpersonal Antisocial Deviance • charm, grandiosity • child behavior • lying, manipulation problems • remorse • juvenile delinquency • emotional depth • boredom, impulsivity • empathy • irresponsibility • violent behavior Modeling the Relation between Psychopathy & Externalizing (Patrick et al., J. Personality Disorders, 2005) testlet 1 testlet 2 testlet 5 .64* testlet 6 testlet 3 testlet 4 PCL-R Factor 1 (Emot-Interp) PCL-R Factor 2 (Beh Deviance) N = 219 o federal prisoners .78* Adult Antisocial Behavior testlet 8 .94* -.16 testlet 7 Externalizing .63* Conduct Disorder .37* Alcohol Use/Abuse .52* -.35* Drug Abuse MPQConstraint Outline: 1. Background: Dual Process Model of Psychopathy - fearlessness, externalizing vulnerability 2. The Externalizing Spectrum a. b. c. d. Etiologic basis Hierarchical model Brain mechanisms Links to other problem domains 3. Clinical Implications Implications for Clinical Case Conceptualization: • Use this model to rework classification and conceptualization of externalizing problems – Spectrum transcends literatures and sections of DSM – Spectrum transcends • “Axis I” or “clinical disorders” • and “Axis II” or “personality disorders” • New way of thinking about the issue of comorbidity: – comorbidity = diagnostic noise, but rather systematic covariation reflecting underlying level of vulnerability • Relevant to both research and front-line clinical work – Focus clinical case conceptualization and research design on both • unifying dimension and • distinctive manifestations (facets) Implications for Assessment: Externalizing Inventory provides for fine-grained (IRTbased) assessment of: 1) Broad Externalizing (EXT) Factor - general liability underlying various types of problems 2) Specific facets - distinctive phenotypic expressions Profile of scores (EXT factor, Agg/Add subfactors, specific facets) vs. binary diagnotic classification. - e.g., high alcohol problems score would have differing implications if patient was low vs. high on broad EXT factor Implications for Treatment Summary: Distinctive components of psychopathy reflect different underlying mechanisms: 1) Weak defensive system (low “trait fear”) - associated with traits of high dominance and low distress, fearfulness, depression. - associated with lack of fear-potentiated startle. 2) High “Externalizing” vulnerability - associated with traits of impulsivity, irresponsibility, alienation, and aggression. - associated with weak frontal-executive function but normal emotional reactivity. In children as young as 4-5 years: Psychopathy is also manifested in terms of distinctive components: Callous-unemotional features: narcissism, lack of normal affect Impulsive conduct problems: externalizing tendencies (e.g., work of Paul Frick, Essi Viding, etc.) Implications for Treatment: 1) Multiple targets for intervention General Externalizing (EXT) Factor: - target impairments in impulse control, emotion regulation; alienation, urges - e.g., pause & reflect; detect emotional arousal; reframe interactions; interrupt urges - external feedback is crucial; but for effects to persist, need to enhance deeper processing activity (e.g., “brain training”). - role for medications (e.g., methylphenidate, phenytoin: normalize P300 in high-EXT individuals) Multiple targets for intervention - separate from general EXT factor, target residual factors that contribute to: Aggressive Behaviors - callousness/thrill-seeking; overlap with Emotional/Interpersonal factor of psychopathy? Addictions - reward-seeking factor? (need for specialized interventions?) • also: may need to target distinctive contributing/maintaining factors associated with specific expressions of EXT (e.g., alcohol vs. drug vs. nicotine dependence) Multiple targets for intervention Emotional/Interpersonal features of psychopathy: - obstacle to treatment: low distress/ dissatisfaction; dominant, manipulative - evidence that traditional treatments may enhance recidivism (cf. Harris & Rice, 2006) - alternative approaches needed: . behavioral: modify expression of agentic (controlling/manipulative) tendencies? . drugs: enhance negative emotional reactivity/sensitivity? Other ideas? Implications for Treatment: 2) Emotion/motivation vs. cognition Need to consider underlying motivations for behavior: e.g., anger/revenge vs. stress reduction agency/control vs. boredom vs. addictive cravings vs. Emotion lies closer to action than cognition (e.g., Lang; LeDoux; Berridge). Implications for Treatment: 3) Different interventions required for different subgroups of “dangerous” offenders with differing underlying motivations… PCL-R Psychopathy Subtypes (Hicks, Markon, Patrick et al., 2005) Identifying Psychopathy Subtypes using Model-Based Cluster Analysis • Study sample = 96 criminal psychopaths (PCL-R Total score > 30). – also: 125 nonpsychopathic control prisoners (PCL-R score < midpoint for Total and each Factor) • Cluster analysis variables: trait scales of the Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire (MPQ; Tellegen, in press)… Multidimensional Personality Questionnaire (Tellegen, in press) Positive Emotionality (PEM) effectance Social Potency Achievement affiliation Well Being Social Closeness Negative Emotionality (NEM) Stress Reaction Alienation Aggression Constraint (CON) Control (vs. Impulsivity) Harm Avoidance Traditionalism Data Analysis • employed model-based cluster analysis to test for the presence of subtypes in the psychopath sample using the MPQ primary scales as cluster variables • provides a quantitative (“goodness of fit”) criterion for determining the # of clusters and their parameters Type I Psychopath: “Emotionally Stable Type” • MPQ trait correlates reflect boldness and resiliency: – immune to negative events (low Stress Reaction) – socially dominant, ambitious (high PEMEffectance) • The “classic” (primary) psychopath—cf. Cleckley’s Mask of Sanity? - may appear well-adjusted in some contexts (e.g., occupations that require autonomy and coping with stressful circumstances) Type II Psychopath: “Externalizing Type” • MPQ trait and external correlates consistent with high externalizing: – – – – aggressive, alienated, & stress reactive (high NEM) poor impulse control (low Constraint) lacks close social relations (low Communal-PEM) earlier crime, lower So, > fights, > alcoholism • Adult manifestation of the early onset, life course persistent offender (Moffitt, 1993)? Cortical Reactivity Dual Process Model of Psychopathy: Psychopathy Trait Fear Blink Startle The End Krueger (Archives of General Psychiatry, 1999): - factor analyzed DSM diagnostic data from the NCS (N = 8,098 men and women). - found 2 general factors that accounted for systematic comorbidity among the most common DSM disorders: 1) Internalizing factor: anxiety disorders, mood disorders 2) Externalizing factor: antisocial personality disorder, alcohol dependence, drug dependence Note: These two general factors were positively correlated (~ .5).